On the plane home to Denver from Brussels by way of Washington DC, I was struck by an article in Le Monde (March 20) about the death of Adam Rayski. I had never heard of the man till reading his obituary. Several things stood out.

0 1. He was born in Bialystok (now in E. Poland), just a few miles away from Grodno (now in Byelorus) from where all my grand parents immigrated.

o 2. His picture – that of a dapper, shortish man in a suit and fashionable hat, reminded me of Meyer Lansky (who also hailed from Grodno, who at least in his life style – fine dresser, picky, extremely good with numbers and from a dirt poor Jewish background) reminds me of my father, Herb Prince. Indeed Rayski, Lansky and Prensky (that was the original name before it was legally bastardized to Prince) could easily have been triplets they look so much alike.

o 3. But although they might have looked and dressed alike, there the resemblance ends. Rayski was a leader in both the French and Polish Communist Parties. I’m told my father’s venture into left politics was limited to a weekend at a summer camp in those formidable mountains, the Catskills, where, unsure of marxist etiquette, he asked someone to `please pass the salt comrade’. He never used the word again. I don’t fault him for that, but I wish he hadn’t changed the family name.

As for Lansky, he was, most of his life what I would call a `left-liberal gangster’, working especially well with Italians and Blacks, paid his staff well, didn’t mind – if the book Little Man is accurate – paying some taxes, and believed in `the American Dream’ although granted, he took an original path to get there. But then what he was doing then, mostly gambling, is now legal, so he could be called something of a cultural pioneer although I admit that is overstating the case. And true he never forgave Fidel Castro for nationalizing his biggest financial venture, a casino in Havana…but still, politically, he was no rightwnger.

There is little doubt that Rayski used the term on a daily basis, first with utter sincerity, later with more than a dose of cynicism. He served in the Polish post war government until 1956 before being victimized by the anti-semitic purges which plagued the Polish Communist Party in the fifties and sixties.

In death, Rayski will be in good company. He was buried in Pere-la-Chaise cemetery in Paris where lie the remains of Chopin, Sarah Bernhardt, Simone Signoret and Yves Montand side by side, Jimmy Hendricks and Richard Wright, a whole group of prominent French Communists, many victims of Nazi oppression and a fair number of communards, who as members of the Paris Commune, were lined up against the wall of the cemetery and shot to death in the summer of 1871 for daring to show that the working people of Paris could run the city as well as their more bourgeois counterparts. The bullet marks are still there 137 years later.

Rayski’s political career was especially interesting.

His was a full life of commitment to others and political radicalism. A true believer and from all appearances, one hell of an organizer. One indication of his talents is the fact that Le Monde chose to write his obituary. It began with his work in the Polish Communist Party in Bialystok early on. Forced into exile in Paris in 1932, he decides on a career as a journalist. Fluent in Polish, Russian, French and German (not uncommon for Jews from Bialystok – my material grandmother spoke seven langauges fluently) he continued his political career within the French Communist Party where he becomes a leader of what was referred to as `the Jewish Section’ (that part of the party that worked among the Jewish working class elements in France). He was instrumental in creating a communist Yiddish journal Naie Presse (the new press) and wrote regularly for L’Humanite, mass circulation newspaper of the French CP, still published and still read by several hundred thousand people every day (although its circulation used to be in the millions).

He followed the French CP line in support of the Hitler-Stalin Pact (several of my uncles quit the American CP over that) but once the Nazis invaded the USSR in June 1941, he became active in the resistance movement where he helped direct the clandestine press. Actually, his anti-Nazi activism started prior to that date. Arrested and imprisoned during the Nazi invasion of France, he managed to escape from a POW transit camp in Nantes and make his way back to Paris. There, Rayski helped protect French Jews against Nazi raids and was a leader in the FTP-MOI, a largely Jewish partisan group that engaged in armed struggle against the Nazis. Hunted by the Vichey police, he left Paris in July 1943 for France’s south (not yet occupied by the Nazis). There he helped create what is referred to in French as the CRIF (Conseil representatif des israelites de France). After the war for a while he became, like many leftists of his day (and Lansky and my father) an active supporter of the Zionist movement.

As a result of his left politics he was forced to leave France in 1949. Thanks to the help of Jacques Duclos (one of the larger figures in the history of the French CP – who Le Monde described as `the KGB’s man in the French CP – perhaps an overstatement although he was ardently pro-Soviet), Rayski is able to wrangle a position in the young Polish post war government where he becomes – if i read the translation correctly – national press secretary. He would have been in that position during what are referred to as the Slansky show trials of the early 1950s that was the first of a series of Stalinist directed purges of Jews (and Polish nationalists) from the leadership of the Polish CP. I tried to see what role if any Rayski played in these sorry events but as yet have not found anything, but for someone whose Jewish identity was rather important to him – and whose every brain cell oozed with political sensitivity, he could not have been oblivious to these trends.

He, in turn, would be purged from the Polish CP during the anti-semitic campaign of 1956 which saw the wholesale amputation of Polish Jews from many positions of leadership of that party. Demoted, he is re-assigned to Paris to develop a publishing company there, suspected of being little more than a front for Polish intelligence. For this he was brought to trial and sentenced to seven years of prison in June 1961, but due to the intervention of many allies from his days in the French Resistance, the sentence is commuted after two years. After this, he seems to have dropped out of Communist politics, although he remained active the rest of his life in causes for social justice.

In 1985, just as Gorbachev was coming to power in the USSR, Rayski published a critique of his experience with Communism entitled `Nos Illusions Perdues” in which he criticizes the Communist governments as dictatorships and totalitarian regimes. It seems getting purged triggered a change of heart. I’d like to read it. He does not give the impression of being one of those run-of-the-mill turncoats who left the Communist left to embrace one of the garden varieties of conservatism.

He was a good man, a Jew who started from Bialoystok, like my grandfathers. And he was my kind of Jew…like Curiel, Memmi and Serfati. I’m going to read more of his stuff and write more about him in the future.

Below is the article from Le Monde…if you look closely you’ll see the English translation (i’ll highlight the English) after the french text. Some of it is a bit stilted, but the main ideas come through

Il était le dernier survivant des fondateurs du Crif, créé en 1943 par les responsables de la communauté juive, en pleine période d’Occupation. He was the last surviving founders of Crif, which was established in 1943 by the leaders of the Jewish community, in the midst of Occupation.

Décoré de la médaille de la Résistance et de la croix de Guerre pour ses actes de résistance, il rentra après la guerre en Pologne où il devint responsable d’éditions de la presse communiste. Awarded the Medal of the Resistance and the War Cross for his acts of resistance, he returned after the war in Poland, he became head of editions of the Communist press.

Dear Sir,
I am Annie Rayski, Adam Rayski’s wife.
I just saw now your beautiful article about him ! Five years later…
It will be an “hommage” made by the Mairie de Paris on March 11th (he wrote a few booklets ordered by the Mayor Bertrand Delanoë for college students).
I remember the name “Prince” in the french jewish Community (between 1986 and 2006)
Best regards
Paris, 01/23/2013